Abstract

The upper water column structure in the Bay of Bengal is strongly influenced by the monsoon and associated processes. However, the records of variation in water column stratification during different monsoon phases, are scarce from this region. Here, we have reconstructed the variation in monsoon induced upwelling, mixed layer and thermocline during the last glacial-interglacial transition, by using the relative abundance of mixed layer and thermocline dwelling planktic foraminifera, relative abundance of Globigerina bulloides and the stable oxygen isotopic ratio (δ18O) of surface dwelling Globigerinoides ruber. We report a weaker upwelling during the last glacial interval and late Greenlandian-Northgrippian Age, and strong upwelling during the deglaciation and Meghalayan Age. The intense upwelling shoaled the thermocline during the early glacial interval, last glacial maximum, late deglaciation and the Meghalayan Age. The mixed layer depth increased during the early deglaciation and Late Greenlandian-Northgrippian due to the reduced upwelling and stronger winter monsoon. The shift in the position of the core site with respect to the low salinity coastal currents, due to the rising sea level, also influenced the upper water column structure in the west-central Bay of Bengal. Therefore, the reorganization of the upper water column structure in the west-central Bay of Bengal, on the glacial-interglacial time scale, was mainly influenced by a combination of the upwelling, fresh water influx, sea level and winter monsoon.

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